Dissident Voice

October
23, 2003

While
the pot continues to boil in Washington and London over the manipulated
evidence used to ''justify'' attacking Iraq, an equally passionate debate has
been taking place in Australia, where former Australian intelligence analyst
Andrew Wilkie resigned before the war and immediately went public about the
lying.

That
the Australian Senate saw fit, in a rare move on Oct. 7, formally to censure
Prime Minister John Howard for misleading the public shows that truth can win
out even in a country with a largely apathetic populace and a mainstream press
all too eager to parrot the official line. There are lessons for us, of course,
but Americans cannot be accused of apathy in this particular instance because
the U.S. media have largely ignored the story.

The
Australian Senate censured Howard for producing no evidence to support his
claims last March that Iraq had stockpiles of biological and chemical weapons,
and for suppressing Australian intelligence warnings that war with Iraq would
increase the likelihood of terrorist attacks. One senator accused Howard of
"unprecedented deceit.''

The
Senates action came just six weeks after Wilkie testified before a
parliamentary committee about the abuse of intelligence in the run-up to war
and found himself embroiled in a highly publicized one-on-one debate with the
prime minister. A senior analyst in Australias (CIA-equivalent) Office of
National Assessments, Wilkie is still the only intelligence analyst, of all
those in Washington and London with direct experience of the flim-flam
marketing of the war, to resign in protest.

His
testimony included the following accusations against the government:

*
"Australia's tiny agencies needed to rely on the sometimes weak and skewed
views contained in the assessments prepared in Washington... Intelligence gaps
were sometimes back-filled with disinformation. Worst-case sometimes took
primacy over most-likely. The threat was sometimes overestimated as a result of
the fairy tales coming out of the U.S.''

*
"Most often the government deliberately skewed the truth by taking the
ambiguity out of the issue. . . . Qualifications like 'probably,' 'could' and
'uncorroborated evidence suggests' were frequently dropped. Much more useful
words like 'massive' and 'mammoth' were included, even though such words had
not been offered to the government by the intelligence agencies. Before we knew
it, the government had created a mythical Iraq, one where every factory was up
to no good and weaponization was continuing apace.''

Australia's
government, for its part, has done everything it can to smear and discredit
Wilkie. Sound familiar?

The
Australian press found it impossible to ignore the Howard-Wilkie controversy,
and now much of the populace understands that the ostensible reasons for
attacking Iraq were cooked in Washington and served up by Australian leaders
all too willing to march in lockstep with the Bush administration. Those
Australian leaders are now being held accountable.

Wilkies
Aug. 22 testimony to parliament was devastating and holds up particularly well
in the wake of special CIA advisor David Kays fools errand in search of
"weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.''

In
his testimony, Wilkie addressed the question that keeps cropping up not only in
Australia but in the United States and the United Kingdom as well: If the casus
belli was neither WMD nor support for al Qaeda, then what was it? He reminded
Australian lawmakers that ONA had made it ''very clear'' to the government that
"the U.S. was intent on invading Iraq for more-important reasons.''

To
find the ''more-important reasons,'' Wilkies former ONA colleagues needed no
spies to ferret out the answer. They could, and did, simply read the
ideological and strategic rationale for conquering Iraq by clicking on the
Project for a New American Century, a think-tank created in 1977 by Vice
President Dick Cheney, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and others now in
charge of U.S. policy toward the Middle East.

A
PNAC White Paper of September 2000, ''Rebuilding Americas Defenses,'' laid out
two central requirements for U.S. military forces: (1) ''Fight and decisively
win multiple, simultaneous major theater wars;'' and (2) "perform the
'constabulary duties associated with shaping the security environment in
critical regions.''

The
tragedy of 9/11 made it possible for Cheney, Rumsfeld and others, with help
from National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice, to morph that White Paper into
a new military strategy. On Sept. 20, 2001, the White House proclaimed its new
preemptive war strategy in ''National Security Strategy of the United States of
America'' -- the ideological twin of "Rebuilding Americas Defenses.''

If
Wilkies colleagues could discern the implications, so can intelligence analysts
in Syria, Iran and North Korea. What is truly remarkable is the way that the
U.S. press remains clueless. We are being fed the line that, because the United
States has its hands full with its ''constabulary duties'' in Iraq, the
likelihood of further adventures is slight.

I
want to believe it. But a year ago, despite the escalating rhetoric, I wanted
to believe that U.S. leaders would realize the folly of attacking and trying to
occupy Iraq. Given what they said then about Iraq, it is far from reassuring to
hear senior administration officials now say that, although the Syrians have
WMD, President Bush ''has no plans'' to attack Syria.

It
is all the more essential, then, that the Andrew Wilkies of U.S. and British
intelligence come out of hiding and tell their fellow citizens of the curious
change that Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair have introduced into the
intelligence cycle -- first decide on war, and then cook up the
''intelligence'' to justify it.

Ray
McGovern, a CIA analyst for 27 years, is now on the
steering group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity. Before
retiring, he led one of two CIA teams conducting the most-secret daily
intelligence briefings at the White House. He can be reached at: rmcgovern@slschool.org